Around here, Arcades have gone the way of the CD thrift store, the chain video rental outlet, the one-hour photo developer, the CRT monitor, and the beeper. The last one I can think of closed down 10 years ago in old Trolley Square (a historic mini-mall in Salt Lake City). There's a nicklecade somewhere out in the burbs (Sandy I think) but I haven't bothered with it.
Like others have mentioned in this thread, the forlorn lone cabinet in the odd laudromat or poll hall is all that remains. Even grocery stores have ditched 'em.
I spent a fair amount of idle childhood in arcades (most of that as a voyeur, quarterless as I was). Seems like a strange phenomenon of an extinguished age now, what with the proliferation of java browser games, cell phone games, app games, besides the omnipresent DD game stores and consoles littering the home-entertainment landscape. Time oppressively marches on, and is merciless with outmoded media.
Still, there was nothing quite like the memorable burps and drones of an
Ataxx cabinet machine in one of these bygone places, as I clutched quarter in hand, willing to try my luck.